Incorporating unawareness into contract theory
From MaRDI portal
Publication:380866
DOI10.1016/j.geb.2012.05.009zbMath1274.91247MaRDI QIDQ380866
Publication date: 14 November 2013
Published in: Games and Economic Behavior (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0899825612000826?np=y
Related Items
Incorporating unawareness into contract theory, Multi-task agency with unawareness, Two models of unawareness: comparing the object-based and the subjective-state-space approaches, Framing contingencies in contracts, Persuasion as a contest, Syntactic foundations for unawareness of theorems, Introspective unawareness and observable choice, Unawareness of theorems, Unawareness without AU introspection, Discovery and equilibrium in games with unawareness, Games with unawareness, Prudent rationalizability in generalized extensive-form games with unawareness, Delegation and information disclosure with unforeseen contingencies, Guessing the game: an individual's awareness and assessment of a game's existence, Vertically differentiated duopoly with unaware consumers, Solution concepts of principal-agent models with unawareness of actions, Dynamic unawareness and rationalizable behavior, Asymmetric awareness and moral hazard, A canonical model for interactive unawareness
Cites Work
- Incorporating unawareness into contract theory
- Interactive unawareness
- Information structures with unawareness
- Maxmin expected utility with non-unique prior
- Unawareness and bankruptcy: a general equilibrium model
- Awareness and partitional information structures
- Competitive equilibrium with unawareness in economies with production
- Extensive games with possibly unaware players
- Shrouded Attributes, Consumer Myopia, and Information Suppression in Competitive Markets
- Incomplete Contracts, Vertical Integration, and Supply Assurance
- Unforeseen Contingencies and Incomplete Contracts
- Default and Renegotiation: A Dynamic Model of Debt
- Incomplete Contracts: Where do We Stand?
- Internal versus External Capital Markets